I have spent about seven years preparing drawing of Climax CN 1551 in 3D CADD (Alibre not Solid Works) while I was working on CN 1551 and with help from John Lewis who saved the extant Climax drawings which are hit and miss. It is fairly complete except for a few parts which I have not finished but am still working on except for rivets, bolts and fasteners, etc. About 3700 parts so far.

What I am looking for is a way to save this work permanently so that other restorers can use the work.

A 3D pdf (very large file) printed from the assembled CAD files of almost all of the locomotive can be downloaded at:

Requires Adobe Acrobat or Acrobat Reader to use the 3D features (browser pdf viewers will not work). One can zoom in, rotate, pan, and hide individual parts or assemblies to see what is otherwise hidden.

Any suggestions will be appreciated.

dinwitty

Post subject: Re: Climax Drawings

Posted: Tue Nov 28, 2017 11:41 pm

Joined: Wed Oct 22, 2008 8:18 pmPosts: 2218

for general viewing, pdf 3d may be fine, but if a user needs hardcore 3d, the original files should be available, and/or converted to popular formats, DXF, 3ds, step...

The first place I can think of is Google drive, other sites like Mega, there may be other free hosting sites with some storage room

Paul Boschan

Post subject: Re: Climax Drawings

Posted: Wed Nov 29, 2017 11:43 am

Joined: Mon Mar 14, 2011 6:45 pmPosts: 71

As mentioned previously, this is/was a massive undertaking on your part and I congratulate you on your efforts. The Roaring Camp and Big Trees Narrow Gauge Railroad is in the beginning stages of restoring their 50 ton, two truck Climax (C/N 1692 built 1928) and I am sure they will welcome the use of your model. Especially since they have to change the gauge from 42" (standard gauge trucks with the wheels pushed in) to 36" gauge.

I would suggest approaching a library or museum that already has a repository of railroad related documentation. The DeGolyer Library at Southern Methodist University, home to a large collection of Baldwin documents and the California State Railroad Museum Library, home to a large collection of Lima documentation come to mind.

Good luck and thanks again for this tremendous effort.

dinwitty

Post subject: Re: Climax Drawings

Posted: Wed Nov 29, 2017 2:38 pm

Joined: Wed Oct 22, 2008 8:18 pmPosts: 2218

Saving them in multiple mediums would be valuable, blueprint, CD/DVD/online perhaps multiple libraries. Notre Dame has repositories dating back...well I found electric railway journals original copies dating into the 1800's.

WESIII

Post subject: Re: Climax Drawings

Posted: Thu Nov 30, 2017 7:34 pm

Joined: Wed Dec 02, 2015 10:38 amPosts: 23

HAER has expressed great interest in 2D drawings - which will need considerable work.

Now to find a place or places for electronic or part files.

WESIII

Post subject: Re: Climax Drawings

Posted: Sun Dec 03, 2017 12:51 am

Joined: Wed Dec 02, 2015 10:38 amPosts: 23

I have attached a 1:24 Scale 2D drawing of Climax CN 1551 for those of you who like steam locomotives. I would have included additional views but the file size limited me to the four shown. Those omitted were Top, and four Oblique Views.

I was recently at dinner speaking with a fellow mechanical engineer about CAD programs and he was telling me about Autodesk Fusion 360. According to him Fusion 360 is a cloud based version of Inventor but he was saying that they have made it 100% free for hobbiests and startup companies. I guess the key is to get as many engineers as possible using the software as well as start up companies addicted and locked into their software.

I haven't really done too much of my own research on it yet. I looked at their website and it is saying $300 was the base subscription price. I saw this discussion which https://forums.autodesk.com/t5/fusion-3 ... -p/6756051 seems to confirm there is a free way for a hobbiest to use. None the less what I found most interesting though as a live steamer was the ability to collaborate.

Imagine today you load the 3D cad model of the Climax up there but you haven't done any detailed 2D production drawings. Down the road, maybe another guy decides to go in build it in 1/8 scale so they all start deriving different drawings off your models, and post them up there and everyone benefits from the process.

I don't know if they do/don't accept importation of alibre files but my friend was saying they have designed it to import complete assemblies from some of the other programs. No idea how well it actually works. If all this is true I would say that Autodesk360 is the best place to put it. By the way thanks for wanting to make it available to all.

By the way here's an interesting post. Someone is in the process of doing this with the Big Boy right now. Imagine if 3 or 4 more people jump in on the project and help him along! https://gallery.autodesk.com/fusion360/ ... motive-bed. I was even able to go over there and see his 3d models so far.

Who is online

You cannot post new topics in this forumYou cannot reply to topics in this forumYou cannot edit your posts in this forumYou cannot delete your posts in this forumYou cannot post attachments in this forum